Infinix says that the case stores up to 2 watts of this energy and transfers it on the phone if necessary. The company also claims that the case uses its “sunflower” wireless load technology, inspired by plants that are moving towards light. This allows the system in the case of “dynamically adjusting the transmission path” to ensure that it gets as much light as possible in a 3 meter range (about 10 feet). None of this is designed to keep your phone loaded while you use it, but Infinix thinks that it can help increase the waking time when you go out anything else. –Julian Chokkattu
Huawei’s tripolar phone exceeds a big screen
Photography: Simon Hill
THE Best folding phones Vèche completely to give you more screen real estate, but can you have too much good thing? Huawei’s Mate XT is like the Honor Magic V3 (8/10, wired recommends) but with an additional screen and fold. In truth, Tri-Fold is an unfit term because there are only two folds, but the three screens form an intelligent design which takes place at 10.2 inch. It can also be used as a double screen at 7.9 inch, or a single screen in the form of a traditional candy bar at 6.4 inch.
Completely unfolded, the Mate XT is only 3.6 mm thick, but you have two folds to face. Fold it completely, and it is 12.8 mm thick, and also a little heavy. The hinges are smooth, and it seems surprisingly durable, with a satisfactory folding action. It has an IPX8 rating for dust resistance.
The Huawei Mate XT Ultimate is based on the own Kirin and Harmony OS of Huawei chipset. The rest of the specifications are solid and close to the flagship, with a triple lens camera (main-up main-up, 12 megapixel ultrawide and 12 megapixel periscope or telephotoctive), a fairly large 5,600 mAh battery, 16 GB of RAM and 1 TB of storage. But then you expect them to envisage the price of € 3,500. If the double of the folds was equal to double the size of the screen, it would be more tempting, but it does not feel far from a foldable book style and you pay a bonus for the novelty at the moment. It is only available in specific markets, such as the Middle East, for the moment, but it should soon land in Europe. –Simon Hill
When the cycling glasses meet an action camera
Photography: Julian Chokkattu
The cameras on our faces seem to be an inevitable future. So why wear an action camera on your body when you can cook it in your glasses on a bicycle? It is the Bleequp Ranger field. In the center of the glasses – UV400 and IP54 evaluated, by the way, a camera that can record up to an hour of 1080p video. There is a small battery accessory which registers at the back of a helmet, dubbing as a rear light, and it increases this video recording time to a total of five hours. The arms of the glasses have speakers so that you can play music, and they seemed pretty good in my brief demo in a very strong space. Naturally, there is the AI in play here but not on the glasses themselves. The algorithms analyze the images and suggest the most interesting clips, bringing them together in a highlighting coil with a minimum of effort on your part. The glasses launch on Kickstarter later this month For $ 499. –Julian Chokkattu
Mirza Art Docomo glasses
Photography: Simon Hill
I got involved in a Japanese calligraphy guided with the help of the ART Docomo glasses in MWC. They are tall and coarse, but these glasses do not need to be connected directly to anything, and you can repair your content in space so that it does not move their heads. It was relatively easy for me to reproduce the symbol in front of me, despite my lack of artistic talent, and they could be used in the workplace to superimpose engine parts or repair of guidance devices. Although these glasses cost about $ 1,500 and mainly target companies, NTT also showed me a new lighter pair that it has in preparation, with a simplified display for navigation and notifications of a phone related to Bluetooth. New generation Mirza AR glasses are intended for Joe Public and will be closer to $ 500, but may require an AI subscription. –Simon Hill
Xpanceo shows more intelligent contact objectives
Photography: Julian Chokkattu
I wrote on Xpanceo to Last Year Mobile CongressAnd the company is back with smarter contact lenses prototypes. One of them is a contact lens which could be recharged via a case of contact objective, and another had biocappers who could analyze certain parameters in tear gas to monitor glucose, cortisol, etc. Another prototype had a model on the objective that moves in response to intraocular pressure, which can help detect glaucoma early, and there was also an intelligent contact objective for AR vision, which had an integrated micro -micro to show the images. I was able to browse this one and read text! The ultimate goal is to cook all these prototypes in a single product – the fabric of science fiction dreams – but this type of miniature technology is incredibly difficult to design. It will take a long time before an intelligent contact lens arrives on the market. –Julian Chokkattu
Soleceler can cool or heat your painful feet
Photography: Simon Hill
By getting closer to 30,000 stages for the day, my burning teots may have had something to do with the soleur who attracts the eyes in the middle of a sea of strange inventions and startups. The kind inventor, Bruno Aubert (thermodynamic engineer) explained that these smart soles heat your feet up to 4 degrees Celsius, or, if you turn them over, cool 3.5 degrees. Beauty is that they are loaded by you walking on them, although they take a few minutes to start (a bit like air conditioning). They cost 50 € and come in a single size, which you should reduce if you are below size 14.